成人确诊COVID-19患者的假性冻疮:一项系统综述

Seon Hayles, Kelsey Williams, Nidhi Thomas, Jabari Morgan, Donna Braham, Maxine Gossell Williams, Jonathan D. Ho
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:假性冻疮与COVID-19有关。然而,许多报告缺乏COVID-19感染的确认。虽然可能相关,但这段时间内的所有冻疮/冻疮样病变都不应被认为与COVID-19相关。本研究调查了患有假性冻疮并确诊为COVID-19的成年人的特征。方法:采用PRISMA指南对PubMed/MEDLINE数据库进行系统评价。纳入确诊COVID-19的成人(18岁)。为了避免重复,未识别的注册表被排除在外。我们提取了研究设计、年龄、性别、种族、地理位置、COVID-19诊断与冻疮发病的关系、确认性检测、住院情况、解剖位置、冷/湿暴露、假性冻疮症状的存在/不存在/描述、活检的存在/不存在/组织病理学发现、组织免疫组化/PCR、皮肤外COVID-19疾病的存在/不存在/详细情况、已有的冻疮、治疗和解决时间。搜寻工作于2022年7月完成。结果:我们确定了13项研究(29例患者)。在感染covid -19的成年人中,假性冻疮的报告主要来自北美和欧洲,在广泛的年龄范围内男女均有发生,患者和患者均受影响,倾向于手脚,可能有症状,也可能无症状。多数患者有皮外症状。解决时间从1周到50天不等。假性冻疮的治疗策略和外观在整个病程中有显著差异。活检很少进行,但发现与经典冻疮相似。结论:许多报告的COVID-19假性冻疮患者缺乏确诊感染。在这次全球大流行期间,感染确认、摄影记录和组织病理学对于确定报告的假性冻疮的同质性至关重要。有必要进一步开展工作,阐明肢端爆发与COVID-19的关系。
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Pseudo-Chilblains in Adult Patients with Confirmed COVID-19: A Systematic Review
Background: Pseudo-chilblains have been associated with COVID-19. Many reports, however, lack confirmation of COVID-19 infection. While likely associated, all chilblains/chilblain-like lesions during this time should not be assumed to be COVID-19 related. This study examines the characteristics of adults with pseudo-chilblains and confirmed COVID-19. Methods: A systematic review of PubMed/MEDLINE database was performed using the PRISMA guidelines. Adults (>18 years) with confirmed COVID-19 were included. De-identified registries were excluded to avoid duplication. We extracted study design, age, sex, race, geographic location, relationship of COVID-19 diagnosis to chilblains onset, confirmatory testing, hospitalization status, anatomical location, cold/damp exposure, presence/absence/description of pseudo-chilblains symptoms, presence/absence of biopsies/histopathologic findings, tissue IHC/PCR, presence/absence/details of extracutaneous COVID-19 disease, pre-existing chilblains, treatment and resolution timeline. The search was completed in July 2022. Results: We identified 13 studies (29 patients). In COVID-19-infected adults, pseudo-chilblains were reported primarily from North America and Europe, occurring in both sexes over a wide age-range, affected well and ill patients, favored the hands and feet and could be symptomatic or asymptomatic. Most patients had extracutaneous symptoms. Resolution time ranged from <1 week to >50 days. There was marked variation in treatment strategies and appearance of pseudo-chilblains relative to entire disease course. Biopsies were infrequently performed but findings similar to classical chilblains were described. Conclusions: Many patients reported as pseudo-chilblains of COVID-19 lack confirmed infection. Infection confirmation, photographic documentation and histopathology are critical to establish homogeneity in reported pseudo-chilblains during this global pandemic. Further work clarifying the relationship of acral eruptions and COVID-19 is necessary.
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